NAME

SYNOPSIS

DESCRIPTION

Pidof finds the process id's (pids) of the named programs. It prints
those id's on the standard output. This program is on some systems used
in run-level change scripts, especially when the system has a System-V
like rc structure. In that case these scripts are located in
/etc/rc?.d, where ? is the runlevel. If the system has a start-stop-daemon (8) program that should be used instead.

OPTIONS

-s Single shot - this instructs the program to only return one pid.
-c Only return process ids that are running with the same root
directory. This option is ignored for non-root users, as they
will be unable to check the current root directory of processes
they do not own.
-n Avoid stat(2) system function call on all binaries which are
located on network based file systems like NFS. Instead of
using this option the the variable PIDOF_NETFS may be set and
exported.
-x Scripts too - this causes the program to also return process
id's of shells running the named scripts.
-o omitpid
Tells pidof to omit processes with that process id. The special
pid %PPID can be used to name the parent process of the pidof
program, in other words the calling shell or shell script.

EXITSTATUS

0 At least one program was found with the requested name.
1 No program was found with the requested name.

NOTES

pidof is actually the same program as killall5; the program behaves
according to the name under which it is called.
When pidof is invoked with a full pathname to the program it should
find the pid of, it is reasonably safe. Otherwise it is possible that
it returns pids of running programs that happen to have the same name
as the program you're after but are actually other programs. Note that
that the executable name of running processes is calculated with
readlink(2), so symbolic links to executables will also match.